United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown has launched yesterday an “unwavering campaign to put Education First” for the world’s 61 million and growing children not receiving an education. In particular, Anne of Carversville stands for the education of girls in every country.

French Roast News

Anne is reading …Huge crowds rallied in Pakistan’s largest city of Karachi on Sunday, expressing their support for the recovery of 14-year-old schoolgirl Malala Yousufzai. The young activist was shot in the head last Tuesday by a Taliban gunman determined to end the education of young girls in Pakistan.

Right-wing Islamic parties and organizations in Pakistan that regularly pull thousands of supporters into the streets to protest against the US have less of an incentive to speak out against the Taliban. The two share a desire to impose Islamic law in the country – even if they may disagree over the Taliban’s violent tactics.

The protest was organized by the Muttahida Quami Movement, whose party chief Aitaf Hussain spoke to the Karachi crowds from his self-imposed exile in London.

“May I ask where are Pakistan’s armed forces and its high-ranking (military) personnel who utilise up to 80 per cent of the country’s resources?” Hussain said while addressing a rally in Karachi on phone from London, where he is in self-imposed exile. viaEconomic Times

Malala Yousufzai was flown out of Pakistan Monday morning on an air ambulance donated by the UAE headed for long-term medical treatment and rehabilitation in Birmingham, England.

Former British Prime Minister and U.N. Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown said in a statement today that he is launching a worldwide petition in support of Yousufzai and every child in Pakistan to receive an education. (See video above)

Tuesday’s Debate

Candy Crowley Wild Card

All media report that Candy Crowley, the host of CNN’s ‘State of the Union’ has unnerved both political campaigns to fear that she will insert herself into an active role in what is proposed to be a town hall meeting between undecided independent voters and the presidential candidates in Tuesday night’s debate.

“In a rare example of political unity,” Mark Halperin reports for TIME magazine, “both the Romney and the Obama campaigns have expressed concern to the Commission on Presidential Debates about how the moderator of the Tuesday town hall has publicly described her role.”

In another interview, on Oct. 11, Politico writes that Crowley told CNN, “The nice thing will be, if the town hall person asks about apples, and they answer oranges, I get to say, ‘Wait a second, the question was about apples — let’s talk about that.”

Given the great propensity of both candidates to not answer questions directly but instead, use the podium to say what they want to say — oranges in response to apples — it seems that most viewers would like to hear the voters’ questions answered directly.

Crowley’s role as moderator follows last week’s generally applauded moderator role of ABC’s Martha Raddatz in the vice presidential debate. Many believe that Crowley will choose to follow in Raddatz’s footsteps and not those of Jim Lehrer who was powerless and almost not present for the first presidential debate.

Bain Capital is a product of the Great Deformation. It has garnered fabulous winnings through leveraged speculation in financial markets that have been perverted … So Bain’s billions of profits were not rewards for capitalist creation; they were mainly windfalls collected from gambling in markets that were rigged to rise.

Romney Tax Plan

Does the math add up?

The Romney-Ryan team has refused to lay out any real details of their tax plan, beyond closing loopholes and then cutting taxes by 20 percent. This is a problem for salivating voters who have a strong appetite for lower taxes.

Reason magazine — hardly a pro-Obama publicaton — writes that “even if the politics work, it’s not clear that the simple math behind the plan does … “

A letter to Congress last week from the congressional Joint Center on Taxation reported that ditching a slew of tax carve outs – by getting rid of most deductions, and adding new taxes and fees on muni bonds and some other investments would only raise enough additional tax revenue to cut rates by 4 percent and remain revenue neutral. The JCT report didn’t look at Romney’s plan specifically. But it does highlight how hard it will be to make it work.

Writing for Bloomberg, Josh Barro has gone one step further, saying that “Romney’s tax plan is mathematically impossible. he can’t simultaneously keep his pledges to cut tax rates 20 percent and repeal the estate tax and alternative minimum tax; broaden the tax base enough to avoid growing the deficit; and not raise taxes on the middle class.”

In last week’s vice presidential debate Martha Raddatz directly asked vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan: “Do you actually have the specifics, or are you still working on it, and that’s why you won’t tell voters?”

The Romney campaign says they have six studies that support their conclusions, leaving FOX News host Chris Wallce to question the sources as credible in an interview with Ed Gillespie, Romney campaign adviser.

“These are very credible sources,” Gillespie pushed back.

“One of these is from a guy — is a blog from a guy who was a top adviser to George W. Bush,” Wallace countered. “These are hardly non-partisan studies.”

Mark Zandi, a former John McCain campaign adviser and Chief Economist at Moody’s Economy said onCNN’s ‘Starting Point’: “Yeah, I think the Tax Policy Center study is the definitive study. They’re non-partisan, they’re very good. They say given the numbers that they’ve been provided by the Romney campaign, no, it will not add up.”

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